Chinese firm to support Nigeria in building first transportation university
Xinhua
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Nigeria has started the construction of the country's first transportation university assisted by a Chinese firm. 

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Jiang Yigao, the managing director of CCECC Nigeria Ltd., speaks at a ground-breaking ceremony of the University of Transportation in Daura, Nigeria, Dec. 2, 2019. Nigeria has started the construction of the country's first transportation university assisted by a Chinese firm. The construction of the new specialized academic institution on a 413-hectare of land is undertaken by the China Civil Engineering Construction Corporation (CCECC) Nigeria Ltd. as part of its corporate social responsibility in the country. Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari on Monday attended the project's ground-breaking ceremony. (Photo: Xinhua)

The construction of the new specialized academic institution on a 413-hectare of land is undertaken by the China Civil Engineering Construction Corporation (CCECC) Nigeria Ltd, as part of its corporate social responsibility in the country. Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari on Monday attended the project's ground-breaking ceremony. 

When completed, the University of Transportation in Daura, the birthplace of Buhari in Nigeria's northern state of Katsina, will focus on research and development of human capital for the country's transport sector. It is expected to mark a new level of growth, as well as economic and educational development in Africa's largest economy. 

The Nigerian leader, while noting the university as the first of its kind in Africa, said it will provide technical skills, enhance managerial capacity and pave way for innovation in Nigeria's transport system, as well as create more job opportunities. 

Buhari said the local transport sector in the country was in dire need of new thinking, skills, and investment, further assuring that the university will open up opportunities for economic growth. 

"When established, the university would, among other things, pave way for the domestication of railway engineering and general transportation sciences in Nigeria, thereby bridging the technology and skill gap in the railway and ultimately transportation sector," the president said. 

He described the project as one which keys into the efforts of the Nigerian government "toward promotion and development of indigenous capacity through technology acquisition and knowledge transfer to effectively maintain and operate numerous railway infrastructure". 

The completion of the university's construction is expected within 18 months. 

Rotimi Amaechi, Nigeria's transport minister, told Xinhua in an interview that the project would go a long way to enhance the existing bilateral relationship between China and Nigeria, as well as encourage patronage of local content. 

"We have talked about the transfer of technology. We have talked about the issue of maintenance... Being able to construct our own railways and knowledge transfer. That would be great," Amaechi said.